The Camera
1. Who is credited with taking the first "permanent" photograph?
The person who was credited with taking the first "permanent" photograph is Louis Daguerre.
2. What specific materials did Louis Daguerre use to create the first "commercial photographic material"?
The specific material that Louis Daguerre used to create the first "commercial photographic material" are silver-plated copper polish, fumes, camera.
3. What type of images is Ansel Adams famous for?
The images Ansel Adams is known for are landscape photos.
4. What are the three fundamental settings you need to understand to be an excellent photographer?
The three fundamental setting you need to understand to be an excellent photographer are light, subject, and composition.
5. What are the three types of metering modes?
The three types of metering modes are Matrix Metering, Center-weighted metering, and Spot Metering.
6. When does the article suggest you use "Center-weight" metering?
The article suggests you use "Center-wight" when you want the camera to prioritize the middle of the frame.
7. What is one very specific subject does the article suggest would be great for "Spot" metering?
One specific subject that the article suggest be great for "Spot" metering is the light around your focus point.
8. What are the four Camera Modes?
The four Camera modes are Program, Shutter Priority, Aperture Priority, and Manual.
9. What is the difference between the Aperture and Shutter priority modes?
The difference between the Aperture and Shutter priority is Aperture is a mode that you can manually set the lens aperture. Shutter is you can manually set the cameras shutter speed and the camera automatically picks the right aperture for you.
10. What is the difference between Manual and AutoFocus?
The difference between Manual and AutoFocus is AutoFocus is simply convenience; it’s easier than focusing manually.
11. Which do you think is best for most circumstances (make sure to answer why you think this)?
I think that Manual is better because what if autofocus messes up its better to do it yourself.
12. When should you use a flash indoors?
I would use the flash inside when the basic lighting plan to be able to capture the day with ease.
13. When should you use a flash outdoors?
I would use the flash outside when when your object is poorly lit.
14. Why is using a tripod a good decision?
Using a tripod is a goo decision because you don't want the photo to come out blurry and better quality.
15. Should you use auto focus when shooing video (why or why not)?
Yes you should use auto focus on some occasions because you do not want the video you are taking to come out blurry.
16. What are the percentages according to the article when deciding to shoot wide, medium and close up (or even extreme close up)?
The percentages according to the article is 50% for close up and extreme close up, and 25% for medium shot.
17. What is a histogram?
A histograms is a diagram consisting of rectangles whose area is proportional to the frequency of a variable and whose width is equal to the class interval.
18. What will a "low key" histogram look like?
A low-key image, for example, is an image where most of the tonal range falls within the darker tones.
19. What will a "high key" histogram look like?
A high-key image contains primarily light tones, and its histogram, which you can view either in some digital cameras' LCD monitors.
20. What is clipping?
The camera will, unless you are manually controlling exposure, try its hardest to create an image that is exposed for the widest possible range of lights and darks in a scene.
The person who was credited with taking the first "permanent" photograph is Louis Daguerre.
2. What specific materials did Louis Daguerre use to create the first "commercial photographic material"?
The specific material that Louis Daguerre used to create the first "commercial photographic material" are silver-plated copper polish, fumes, camera.
3. What type of images is Ansel Adams famous for?
The images Ansel Adams is known for are landscape photos.
4. What are the three fundamental settings you need to understand to be an excellent photographer?
The three fundamental setting you need to understand to be an excellent photographer are light, subject, and composition.
5. What are the three types of metering modes?
The three types of metering modes are Matrix Metering, Center-weighted metering, and Spot Metering.
6. When does the article suggest you use "Center-weight" metering?
The article suggests you use "Center-wight" when you want the camera to prioritize the middle of the frame.
7. What is one very specific subject does the article suggest would be great for "Spot" metering?
One specific subject that the article suggest be great for "Spot" metering is the light around your focus point.
8. What are the four Camera Modes?
The four Camera modes are Program, Shutter Priority, Aperture Priority, and Manual.
9. What is the difference between the Aperture and Shutter priority modes?
The difference between the Aperture and Shutter priority is Aperture is a mode that you can manually set the lens aperture. Shutter is you can manually set the cameras shutter speed and the camera automatically picks the right aperture for you.
10. What is the difference between Manual and AutoFocus?
The difference between Manual and AutoFocus is AutoFocus is simply convenience; it’s easier than focusing manually.
11. Which do you think is best for most circumstances (make sure to answer why you think this)?
I think that Manual is better because what if autofocus messes up its better to do it yourself.
12. When should you use a flash indoors?
I would use the flash inside when the basic lighting plan to be able to capture the day with ease.
13. When should you use a flash outdoors?
I would use the flash outside when when your object is poorly lit.
14. Why is using a tripod a good decision?
Using a tripod is a goo decision because you don't want the photo to come out blurry and better quality.
15. Should you use auto focus when shooing video (why or why not)?
Yes you should use auto focus on some occasions because you do not want the video you are taking to come out blurry.
16. What are the percentages according to the article when deciding to shoot wide, medium and close up (or even extreme close up)?
The percentages according to the article is 50% for close up and extreme close up, and 25% for medium shot.
17. What is a histogram?
A histograms is a diagram consisting of rectangles whose area is proportional to the frequency of a variable and whose width is equal to the class interval.
18. What will a "low key" histogram look like?
A low-key image, for example, is an image where most of the tonal range falls within the darker tones.
19. What will a "high key" histogram look like?
A high-key image contains primarily light tones, and its histogram, which you can view either in some digital cameras' LCD monitors.
20. What is clipping?
The camera will, unless you are manually controlling exposure, try its hardest to create an image that is exposed for the widest possible range of lights and darks in a scene.
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